British and American English

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Revision as of 22:18, 19 March 2008 by imported>Hayford Peirce (some more; years ago, when I was writing, and still wanted to write Brit-type thrillers, I started a list -- I got up to several hundred then gave up; maybe I can find the list again)
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This article examines the differences between British and American English in the areas of vocabulary, spelling and phonology.

Vocabulary

Lexical differences are:

British American
aerodrome airport
aeroplane airplane
aeroport airport
autumn autumn/fall
bonnet hood
boot trunk
braces suspenders
car-park parking lot
chips (French/french) fries [1]
condom condom/rubber (vulgar slang)
crisps chips/potato chips
curtains drapes/draperies/curtains
drawing room living room
dustbin trashcan
dustman garbage collector/garbageman
film movie [2]
flat flat/apartment[3]
(Association) football soccer
judgement judgment
lift elevator
full stop period
lorry/truck[4] truck
nappy diaper
off-licence liquor store
pants underwear/underpants
pavement sidewalk
petrol gasoline/gas
road road/pavement
rubber[5] eraser
rug blanket
saloon sedan
spanner wrench
sweets candy
sweetshop candy store
tea (sometimes) supper, dinner
tin can
torch flashlight
trousers trousers/pants
windscreen windshield
wing fender

Spelling

The most striking differences between the spelling of AmE and BrE are in these suffixes (the accents show stress and pronunciation, see English phonemes):

British - American -
-ence defénce -ense defénse
aluminium aluminum
grey gray
lîcence noun[6] lîcense
offénce offénse[7]

Notes

  1. Though strictly, these are two different shapes, chips being broader than fries.
  2. ‘Movie’ is nowadays normal in BrE when talking Hollywood.
  3. Increasingly heard in British English; in San Francisco, California, at least, a city of small, shared buildings, both "flat" and "apartment" are used, mostly interchangeably. Purists, however, distinguish between the two: an "apartment" is in a building that has a shared main entrance; a "flat" has its own outside entrance door.
  4. British trucks are traditionally small, and pulled, typically on rails.
  5. A pitfall for British visitors to America, where 'rubber' is a vulgar term for a condom.
  6. lîcense is the verb in BrE, cf. licensêe in both. Mostly -ence is used in both, as with fénce; but sénse, dénse and suspénse in both.
  7. In American sporting contexts, one may hear óffénse and dêfénse.